Missouri Roofers
Looking for roofers in Missouri? Below are 10 top-rated roofers serving Missouri in 2026 — every one rated 4.0+ stars with 10 or more verified Google reviews. Compare ratings and review counts, then contact them directly by phone or website. No middleman, no lead fees.
Listings are sourced from public Google Business Profiles and sorted by rating. Are you a Missouri roofer? Add your business free below.
Resolve Roofing
1000 Big Bear Blvd Suite 100, Columbia, MO 65202, USA
336 reviews
Reviews via Google
Andres Roofing
11843 Devonshire Ave, St. Louis, MO 63131, USA
272 reviews
Reviews via Google
Total Roofing
12747 Olive Blvd Suite 300, St. Louis, MO 63141, USA
207 reviews
Reviews via Google
RC Roofing and Contracting
1901 E Fifth St, Washington, MO 63090, USA
157 reviews
Reviews via Google
The Wright Construction & Roofing Company
44 Sander Rd, Lake Ozark, MO 65049, USA
52 reviews
Reviews via Google
Stonebridge Roofing
5940 MO-94 #103, Weldon Spring, MO 63304, USA
381 reviews
Reviews via Google
1st Choice Roofing & Construction
1925 William St, Cape Girardeau, MO 63703, USA
131 reviews
Reviews via Google
Washington Roofing & Construction
905 Bieker Rd, Washington, MO 63090, USA
80 reviews
Reviews via Google
Cardinal Contractors (Roofing)
4525 Veterans Memorial Pkwy, St Peters, MO 63376, USA
632 reviews
Reviews via Google
Midwest Roofing
36 Cave Dr, Eldon, MO 65026, USA
533 reviews
Reviews via Google
Data sourced from Google Places. Updated April 12, 2026.
Hiring a Roofer in Missouri
Buildermuse currently lists 10 roofers in Missouri, averaging 4.9 stars across 2,781 verified Google reviews. That is an unusually strong field — when nearly every firm clears 4.8 stars, response time and availability become the real differentiators, so call two or three rather than only the top result. Most of the crews above operate out of St. Louis, Washington, and Cape Girardeau.
Missouri does not require a state-level general contractor license. St. Louis, Kansas City, and other municipalities handle all contractor licensing. Requirements vary significantly between jurisdictions. With no statewide license for this work, checking city and county requirements — plus active insurance — falls on you as the hiring party.
Labor is the biggest line item on most bids, and the Missouri market sets the floor: construction workers here average $36.17 an hour — about $75,244 a year — across 149,341 workers statewide, per Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Use that figure as a sanity check when comparing quotes — a bid priced far below market labor rates usually means subcontracted or uninsured crews.
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